Reporting by Investment Advisers to Private Funds and Certain Commodity Pool Operators and Commodity Trading Advisors on Form PF

Introduction

On October 31, 2011, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued a joint release adopting new reporting requirements for certain advisers to hedge funds and other private funds. Under the new SEC rule, SEC-registered investment advisers with at least $150 million in private fund assets under management (private fund advisers) must periodically file a new reporting form (Form PF) with the SEC.

The new rule implements provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act under which the SEC was required to adopt reporting requirements for private fund advisers. The information reported on Form PF will be provided to the Financial Stability Oversight Council for use in monitoring risks to the U.S. financial system.

In the joint release, the CFTC also adopted a new rule. Under this rule, private fund advisers that are also registered with the CFTC as commodity pool operators or commodity trading advisors will satisfy certain proposed CFTC reporting obligations by filing private fund information on Form PF. In addition, such advisers are permitted to report on Form PF regarding commodity pools that are not “private funds” to comply with certain proposed CFTC reporting obligations. As a result, these advisers may consolidate certain of their reporting with respect to private funds and non-private fund commodity pools.

The SEC does not intend to make public data reported on Form PF that is identifiable to any particular adviser or fund, and the Dodd-Frank Act provides special confidentiality protections for this data. However, the SEC may use Form PF data in an enforcement action.

Reporting Requirements

Under the reporting requirements, only SEC-registered advisers with at least $150 million in private fund assets under management must file Form PF. These private fund advisers are divided by size into two broad groups — large advisers and smaller advisers. The amount of information reported and the frequency of reporting depends on the group to which the adviser belongs.

“Large private fund advisers” are:

Advisers with at least $1.5 billion in assets under management attributable to hedge funds.

Advisers with at least $2 billion in assets under management attributable to private equity funds.

All other respondents are considered “smaller private fund advisers.” However, this is not intended to imply that these advisers are a small entity for purposes of SBREFA, only that they fall under certain of the Form’s reporting thresholds.

Under the Commission rules, for purposes of the Advisers Act and the Regulatory Flexibility Act, an investment adviser generally is a small business if it: (1) has assets under management having a total value of less than $25 million; (2) did not have total assets of $5 million or more on the last day of its most recent fiscal year; and (3) does not control, is not controlled by, and is not under common control with another investment adviser that has assets under management of $25 million or more, or any person (other than a natural person) that had total assets of $5 million or more on the last day of its most recent fiscal year. Advisers that are regarded as small under this definition typically will have no obligation to report on Form PF because they are unlikely to satisfy the minimum threshold for registering with the SEC or, if registered, the minimum threshold for reporting on Form PF (which is $150 million in private fund assets under management).

See Instructions 1, 5 and 6 to Form PF for more information regarding calculating assets under management for purposes of the thresholds.

Smaller Private Fund Advisers

Advisers that have at least $150 million in private fund assets under management but do not exceed a “large adviser” threshold must file Form PF only once a year, within 120 days of the end of the fiscal year. These advisers are required to report only basic information regarding the private funds they advise. This includes limited information regarding size, leverage, investor types and concentration, liquidity, and fund performance. Smaller advisers managing hedge funds must also report hedge fund specific information about fund strategy, counterparty credit risk, and use of trading and clearing mechanisms.

Large Private Fund Advisers

Large private fund advisers must provide more detailed information than smaller advisers. The focus and frequency of the reporting depends on the type of private fund the adviser manages.

Large hedge fund advisers must file Form PF to update information regarding the hedge funds they manage within 60 days of the end of each fiscal quarter. These advisers must report on an aggregated basis information regarding exposures by asset class, geographical concentration, and turnover by asset class. In addition, for each managed hedge fund having a net asset value of at least $500 million, these advisers must report certain information relating to that fund’s exposures, leverage, risk profile and liquidity.

Large liquidity fund advisers must file Form PF to update information regarding the liquidity funds they manage within 15 days of the end of each fiscal quarter. These advisers must provide information on the types of assets in each of their liquidity fund’s portfolios, certain information relevant to the risk profile of the fund, and the extent to which the fund has a policy of complying with all or aspects of the Investment Company Act’s principal rule concerning registered money market funds (Rule 2a-7).

Large private equity fund advisers must file Form PF annually within 120 days of the end of the fiscal year. They must respond to questions focusing primarily on the extent of leverage incurred by their funds’ portfolio companies, the use of bridge financing, and their funds’ investments in financial institutions.

Compliance Dates

There is a two-stage phase-in period for compliance with Form PF filing requirements.

Most private fund advisers must begin filing Form PF following the end of their first fiscal year or fiscal quarter, as applicable, to end on or after December 15, 2012. For instance, a smaller private fund adviser with a December 31 fiscal year end would need to file its first report no later than April 30, 2013.

However, the following advisers must begin filing Form PF following the end of their first fiscal year or fiscal quarter, as applicable, to end on or after June 15, 2012:

Advisers with at least $5 billion in assets under management attributable to hedge funds.

Contacting the Commission

The Commission’s Division of Investment Management is happy to assist small investment advisers with questions regarding the Form PF reporting requirements. The Division’s Office of Investment Adviser Regulation answers questions submitted by email at iarules@sec.gov or by telephone at (202) 551-6787.

Questions regarding other investment management matters concerning small companies may be directed to the Division’s Office of Chief Counsel by email at IMOCC@sec.gov or by telephone at (202) 551-6825.

1 This guide was prepared by the staff of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as a “small entity compliance guide” under section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, as amended (SBREFA). The guide summarizes and explains rules adopted by the SEC but is not a substitute for any rule itself. Only the rule itself can provide complete and definitive information regarding its requirements.